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IDDF2021-ABS-0140 Gut microbiota significantly correlate with body constitution in traditional chinese medicine

Authors :
Jonathan Wei Jie Lee
Meihui Xu
Chun Wie Chong
Jeremy Fung Yen Lim
Haohui Liu
Kai Yee Toh
Source :
Basic Gastronenterology.
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and British Society of Gastroenterology, 2021.

Abstract

Background The gut microbiome plays an instrumental role in cardiovascular, metabolic and gastrointestinal health (Valdes et al. 2018). In Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), one’s health status can be described by nine body constitutions (BCs) which are broadly classified as ‘Neutral’, indicating optimal health, or ‘Unbalanced’, indicating suboptimal health. Similar to the gut microbiome, BCs are strongly influenced by lifestyle and diet. We evaluated the gut microbial composition of Neutral, Qi-Deficiency (QD), Phlegm-dampness (PD) and Damp Heat (DH) subjects. The latter three are unbalanced BCs, with QD associated with heart disease (Zhu et al. 2017), PD with obesity and metabolic syndrome (Wang et al. 2013), and DH with gastrointestinal disease (Liang et al. 2020). Methods Stool samples were collected from 211 healthy subjects and gut microbial composition was profiled using 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing of the V3-V4 regions. BCs were determined using the Constitution in Chinese Medicine Questionnaire (Wang, 2005). Alpha diversity of QD, PD and DH was inferred and compared against that of Neutral using the Kruskal-Wallis test. Differentially abundant bacterial phyla, family and species were identified by calculating Log2FoldChange of taxa in the unbalanced BCs compared to Neutral. Results There were 135 Neutral, 59 QD, 24 PD and 12 DH subjects. 16 participants exhibited two or more unbalanced BCs. PD exhibited significantly lower alpha diversity (Shannon, Simpson) than Neutral (p Conclusions Varying TCM BCs exhibit unique microbiota signatures. Participants with unbalanced BCs are associated with greater dysbiosis compared to participants with Neutral BC. The lower alpha diversity in PD is consistent with that in obese and metabolic syndrome patients (Stanislawski et al. 2019; Oh et al. 2021). Streptococcus gallolyticus, a species associated with gastrointestinal malignancy (Chand et al. 2016), was significantly higher in all three unbalanced BCs and thus may serve as a potential biomarker for identifying patients with unbalanced BCs.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Basic Gastronenterology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........28b9163122d7307e9681104a8c2fd5ff
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2021-iddf.45